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Post by Lommaren on Sept 22, 2017 7:34:29 GMT -5
As random as it sounds! With winter coming up post forecasts for Siberian cold freakshows Hope you like this thread idea lol! This thread is a tribute to atsizat and Turkey's answer to Vostok Station: Göle! This is Yakutsk's five-day forecast. Still looking quite moderate. Verkhoyansk on the other hand is starting to get a bit more nasty during nights, resembling March here! Vladivostok though... the Siberian monsoon still seems to be going on the Siberian riviera
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Post by jgtheone on Sept 22, 2017 7:37:48 GMT -5
had to do it Yakutsk cools down bloody quickly though, I want to see the actual point where it switches from 30s to this!
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Post by Lommaren on Sept 22, 2017 7:41:11 GMT -5
Göle is like a fucking subtropical climate lol
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Post by alex992 on Sept 22, 2017 7:42:08 GMT -5
Today in Prudhoe Bay the low was -10 C.
Prudhoe Bay is located on the shores of the Arctic Ocean in the north of Alaska.
Prudhoe Bay is the coldest town in the universe.
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Post by alex992 on Sept 22, 2017 7:45:44 GMT -5
had to do it Yakutsk cools down bloody quickly though, I want to see the actual point where it switches from 30s to this! If you look at climates like the interior of Alaska or Siberia, their transition into autumn starts being underway during mid-late August. It often turns cold and rainy towards the end of the month. Always interesting to watch their forecasts in August and September because it's like a switch flips in the climate.
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Post by boombo on Sept 22, 2017 7:46:01 GMT -5
I think I'll stick with Skipton's new twin town of Kilpisjärvi For a place that had nearly 50 cm of snow on the ground at the start of June it's still pretty mild.
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Post by Lommaren on Sept 22, 2017 7:47:24 GMT -5
Keep us posted on Prudhoe Bay please Alex Kiruna is the coldest climate in Sweden. Therefore I need to post its forecasts
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Post by boombo on Sept 22, 2017 7:48:37 GMT -5
If you look at climates like the interior of Alaska or Siberia, their transition into autumn starts being underway during mid-late August. It often turns cold and rainy towards the end of the month. Always interesting to watch their forecasts in August and September because it's like a switch flips in the climate. Is there anywhere where you can get day-by-day averages for these places in interior Alaska? Their Septembers/Octobers probably drop more than our entire year!
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Post by boombo on Sept 22, 2017 7:50:28 GMT -5
This has got to be the worst time of year in the Arctic. No chance of warmth, no chance of snow, just boring 8C highs and each day 10 minutes shorter than the last one.
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Post by Lommaren on Sept 22, 2017 7:50:31 GMT -5
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Post by alex992 on Sept 22, 2017 7:53:17 GMT -5
Anaktuvuk Pass is located in the Brooks Range of Alaska at high elevation and at 68 N. Anaktuvuk Pass can haves snow even in July. It's the only place in North America that has recorded a sub-0 F temperature in June. Anaktuvuk Pass is the coldest town in Alaska.
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Post by boombo on Sept 22, 2017 7:58:54 GMT -5
Here's Svalbard, shame Jakobsli isn't here to tell us how far above average this is but it's still as dreary as our December FFS, look at how much daylight they're losing as well!
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Post by alex992 on Sept 22, 2017 7:59:21 GMT -5
If you look at climates like the interior of Alaska or Siberia, their transition into autumn starts being underway during mid-late August. It often turns cold and rainy towards the end of the month. Always interesting to watch their forecasts in August and September because it's like a switch flips in the climate. Is there anywhere where you can get day-by-day averages for these places in interior Alaska? Their Septembers/Octobers probably drop more than our entire year! wrcc.dri.edu/cgi-bin/cliMAIN.pl?ak2968Click on "Daily Tabular Data". Their average high goes form 61 F (16 C) on September 1 to 20 F (-7 C) on October 31!
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Post by jgtheone on Sept 22, 2017 8:00:10 GMT -5
Our actual version of a polar/siberian climate.
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Post by Lommaren on Sept 22, 2017 8:20:53 GMT -5
No sign of cool temps in Turpan (the hottest-summer winter climate on earth) just yet Avg Jan mean is -7.6C/13.5F thanks to the Siberian high, while summer days average 40C/104F (similar to Las Vegas). Here's Komsomolsk-on-Amur (50N East Siberia) the coldest non-subarctic city on the planet
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Post by Lommaren on Sept 23, 2017 6:37:18 GMT -5
Inukjuak's weekly forecast from the Canadian Met Service Pure misery for being coastal at 58N this early... Norilsk takes the cake though! Has gone a fair bit longer than Verkhoyansk right now
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Post by Hlidskjalf on Sept 23, 2017 8:48:16 GMT -5
Im sure glad I don't live in Norilsk.
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Post by Babu on Sept 23, 2017 15:43:45 GMT -5
Tomsø is having quite the forecast...
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Post by Lommaren on Sept 23, 2017 15:51:06 GMT -5
SMHI is a bit wild-west when it comes to Tromsö though! They've estimated -24C lows before when the all-time record is 18 I'll have to check YR to see whether that one's on. Looks very similar though, wow. They deserve a lucky break up there, hope they enjoy it
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Post by Babu on Sept 23, 2017 16:54:13 GMT -5
SMHI is a bit wild-west when it comes to Tromsö though! They've estimated -24C lows before when the all-time record is 18 I'll have to check YR to see whether that one's on. Looks very similar though, wow. They deserve a lucky break up there, hope they enjoy it It also seems like they've already had a very sunny week judging by zoom.earth
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